Home • ReadSpeaker • Formula 4 • Rivista English4Life • I buoni acquisti • Daisy Stories
Arranger Stories
• Il Blog di Daisy • Grammatica • Studia l'inglese con noi
Risorse sfiziose • Testi paralleli (Wikipedia) • Testi paralleli (altri) • The West Family
Classici in inglese
• Wikibooks •
Corso di base + schede lessicali • Metodo Casiraghi-Jones • Come studiare • Tips • Risposte • Articoli in italiano • Enciclopedia

  IMPARA L'INGLESE CON BABYLON!
Come servizio al nostro pubblico, riportiamo qui a sinistra il box di traduzione di Babylon
. Se c'θ una parola inglese che non capisci, digitala nella casella Traduci... , clicca su GO e subito si aprirΰ una finestra con la traduzione italiana. Per una maggiore comoditΰ e completezza, puoi scaricare qui gratuitamente per un mese Babylon Pro, lo strumento in assoluto piω utile per chi vuole imparare l'inglese. Da oggi anche con il traduttore di frasi inglesi incorporato!
 
 
 


LIST OF CHAPTERS
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76



A SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY

by Laurence Sterne • Copyright note

We thank The Gutenberg Projekt for this public domain version - Complete text in one page

[1/books/0-incl-books.htm]

Previous - Next



As I carried my idea out of the Opera Comique with me, I measured
every body I saw walking in the streets by it.--Melancholy
application! especially where the size was extremely little,--the
face extremely dark,--the eyes quick,--the nose long,--the teeth
white,--the jaw prominent,--to see so many miserables, by force of
accidents driven out of their own proper class into the very verge
of another, which it gives me pain to write down: --every third man
a pigmy!--some by rickety heads and hump backs;--others by bandy
legs;--a third set arrested by the hand of Nature in the sixth and
seventh years of their growth;--a fourth, in their perfect and
natural state like dwarf apple trees; from the first rudiments and
stamina of their existence, never meant to grow higher.

A Medical Traveller might say, 'tis owing to undue bandages;--a
Splenetic one, to want of air;--and an Inquisitive Traveller, to
fortify the system, may measure the height of their houses,--the
narrowness of their streets, and in how few feet square in the
sixth and seventh stories such numbers of the bourgeoisie eat and
sleep together; but I remember Mr. Shandy the elder, who accounted
for nothing like any body else, in speaking one evening of these
matters, averred that children, like other animals, might be
increased almost to any size, provided they came right into the
world; but the misery was, the citizens of were Paris so coop'd up,
that they had not actually room enough to get them.--I do not call
it getting anything, said he;--'tis getting nothing.--Nay,
continued he, rising in his argument, 'tis getting worse than
nothing, when all you have got after twenty or five and twenty
years of the tenderest care and most nutritious aliment bestowed
upon it, shall not at last be as high as my leg. Now, Mr. Shandy
being very short, there could be nothing more said of it.

As this is not a work of reasoning, I leave the solution as I found
it, and content myself with the truth only of the remark, which is
verified in every lane and by-lane of Paris. I was walking down
that which leads from the Carousal to the Palais Royal, and
observing a little boy in some distress at the side of the gutter
which ran down the middle of it, I took hold of his hand and help'd
him over. Upon turning up his face to look at him after, I
perceived he was about forty.--Never mind, said I, some good body
will do as much for me when I am ninety.

I feel some little principles within me which incline me to be
merciful towards this poor blighted part of my species, who have
neither size nor strength to get on in the world.--I cannot bear to
see one of them trod upon; and had scarce got seated beside my old
French officer, ere the disgust was exercised, by seeing the very
thing happen under the box we sat in.

At the end of the orchestra, and betwixt that and the first side

Previous - Next

Translate Text
Original text:

 

[1/books/0-incl-right.htm]